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A moving, eye-opening journey through the world of contemporary art from one of the most innovative voices in the field At a moment in which working as a professional artist is an increasingly unattainable luxury, art criticism duo The White Pube investigate why so many artists try anyway. Labelled \"the Diet Prada of the art world\" by British Vogue, in Poor Artists writers Gabrielle de la Puente and Zarina Muhammad ridicule a contemporary art world that has turned art into artworks, art schools into art universities, and creative expression into cut-throat competition. Poor Artists follows aspiring artist Quest Talukdar as she embarks on a surreal journey into the creative industry, where she must decide whether she cares more about success or staying true to herself. Featuring dialogue from anonymous interviews with real people who have all had to ask themselves the same question - including a Turner Prize winner or two, a recluse, a Venice Biennale fraudster, a communist messiah, a ghost, and a literal knight - The White Pube tell the story of art like never before.
Details
ISBN13: 9780241633762
Format: Hardback
Number of Pages: 320
Edition:
Publication Date: 07 Jan 2025
Publisher: Penguin Books Ltd
Publication City, Country: London, United Kingdom
Dimensions (cm): 224(H)x148(L)x30(W)424
Weight (gm): 424
Author Biography
The White Pube (Author) The White Pube is the collaborative identity of UK-based critics Gabrielle de la Puente and Zarina Muhammad. They have been turning heads since 2015 when the pair began publishing provocative art reviews and essays online from their art school studios and have earned themselves an international cult following due to their innovative writing style, their honesty and irreverence, and their willingness to challenge the pale, male, stale art establishment. Poor Artists is their first book.
Reviews
Irreverent, provocative and funny . . . at some points it reads like a memoir and at others like a wildly surrealist novel . . . I found it
fascinating as someone who knows basically nothing about the art world, but I’d also highly recommend it to anyone who went to art school or works as an artist – I’m sure the experiences it depicts would resonate deeply * Dazed *
Excoriating and energising . . .
interweaves
impassioned real-world critique with an
exuberant narrative that’s by turns
satirical and
surreal * Telegraph *
Reads like
a page-turning novel... What I love about this book is that it doesn’t descend into cynicism and despair, instead balancing the more challenging aspects of living a creative life (including, but not limited to, crippling student debt, predatory gallerists and dealing with rejection) with
a full-throated defence of the inherent value of making, experiencing and talking about art -- Chloe Stead * FRIEZE *
An aspiring young artist’s journey makes for a critique of the art world, in
novel form . . . as it gathered pace, I could feel the
strength and
hopefulness of the authors’ narrative . . . The book is, at its heart, trying to get at the slippery, eternal problem of what art is -- Eliza Goodpasture * Guardian *
In a world where art is as much about capital as it is creativity,
Poor Artists arrives
like a Molotov cocktail in the gallery lobby... the book delivers its most striking message: true artistry can flourish beyond the industry’s broken framework -- Dilsah Kondakci * Flux Magazine *
A surreal yet
gut punching insight into the often foggy world of art -- Isaac Muk * Huck Mag *
Through
striking bathos and playful prose,
Poor Artists takes us through the doors of a surreal and sometimes nauseating art world governed by myth, mysticism and strange rituals.. And yet,
Poor Artists is not about simple nostalgia or authenticity. It is a story about power and alienation, success and compromise, creative survival and self-preservation -- Alexandra Diamond-Rivlin * AnOther Mag *
A manifesto for hungry young artists * The Big Ship *
A patchwork of myth... Fact and fiction blur,
genres bend...If
Poor Artists is poison for institutions, it is
a tonic for the people. It’s for art students at orientation and computer programmers who can still remember the painting in their grandmother’s bedroom. It’s for job-seekers who wish they could sleep under their old Buffy posters instead of in front of their laptop * Skinny Mag *
A scathing yet
darkly humorous critique of the contemporary art world... It is not just a book for art world insiders, it’s for anyone who’s ever felt like a creative outsider trying to survive in a system that seems designed to eat you alive * Canvas Magazine *